Insight

Keeping their culture alive: Tracing Rwandans of Arab descent

In the 1930’s small groups of traders from the East African coast started trickling into Rwanda. These traders, mostly the Omani, were traders dealing in clothes, hoes, machetes, needles and thread, razor blades and other household commodities that locals craved. After establishing their businesses in Kigali, they started spreading around the country.  They moved south to Astrida (now Huye), north to Byumba and east to Rwamagana. These traders decided to settle down, intermarried with the locals and simply refused to return to their desert home. In fact, their descendants still live in Rwamagana. Issa Rugwabiza, an octogenarian born and bred in Rwamagana, remembers their arrival like it was yesterday.
There is a huge Islamic influence in Rwamagana.
There is a huge Islamic influence in Rwamagana.
Times Reporter